Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
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Posted By: fostertomPosted By: renewablejohnWhat renewable technology would you use to provide all your heatingI answered you that but you poured scorn on it, poss because it wasn't a bolt-on 'technology' but something more integral in the (re)design of the house's fabric.
Posted By: renewablejohnI dont know where I am supposed to have poured scorn on using low grade solar
Posted By: renewablejohnNow Fostertom, you are getting carried away. Solar powered Walls! I think I am borderline as it is but that would be OTT (both price and work)It's OK anyway - just wanted to nudge you again, as you seem worth it - quick to learn.
Posted By: pmagowan The bank manager and I are going to get to know one another well as it is!
Posted By: StuartBBank managers still exist?
Posted By: fostertom
For a start, only by collecting at v low temp (collector flow temp about 21C) is it possible to do it thro the coldest months Dec and Jan. If expecting to collect at higher temp, you'll need to rely on heat collected up to October and after March, so you'll either need swimming-pool size super-insulated heat storage tanks, or you'll have to burn fuel thro Dec/Jan.
Posted By: renewablejohnIf you design your thermal solar tubes with tracking reflectors you can multiply the solar energy collected per tube by a factor of 3 which then makes high grade solar available all year roundYes, not bad, at a price, but we're looking at v high whole-system collection-and-use efficiency using large lo-tech collection and input means that double as part of the building fabric. In fundamental principle, it's wasteful to collect at temp higher than necessary and then dilute it down at point-of-use - tho there's reasons like compact storage density and small input radiators that seem to promote high temp collection.
Posted By: fostertomPosted By: renewablejohnIf you design your thermal solar tubes with tracking reflectors you can multiply the solar energy collected per tube by a factor of 3 which then makes high grade solar available all year roundYes, not bad, at a price, but we're looking at v high whole-system collection-and-use efficiency using large lo-tech collection and input means that double as part of the building fabric. In fundamental principle, it's wasteful to collect at temp higher than necessary and then dilute it down at point-of-use - tho there's reasons like compact storage density and small input radiators that seem to promote high temp collection.
Posted By: renewablejohnthe maximum temperature which is achievable and with thermal oil and evacuated tubes that would be approx 230CFor which months of the year? and if 230C is the max, what temps do you get other times?
Posted By: evanThat's very interesting John!
I guess you store up a batch of high temperature oil and then fire up a steam engine generator at a peak time for selling, with the exhaust gas being condensed by the central heating / DHW?
How's the electrical efficiency, and what about the cost compared to a combination of PV and ST?
Posted By: fostertomPosted By: renewablejohnthe maximum temperature which is achievable and with thermal oil and evacuated tubes that would be approx 230CFor which months of the year? and if 230C is the max, what temps do you get other times?
Posted By: evanSounds good. I like the aspect of combining all sorts of high-ish grade heat, you could also use biogas from kitchen waste / sewage etc on a very small scale which is difficult to make use of otherwise.
But "PV was a non starter due to inefficiency of charging batteries. " - Huh?
Posted By: evanI suspect 230 is the max for the oil / storage system, rather than the collectors. Just a thought.
Posted By: SteamyTeaHow do you compare efficiencies between fuel/energy input/ourputs?
Posted By: renewablejohnPosted By: evan
But "PV was a non starter due to inefficiency of charging batteries. " - Huh?
We wanted a system that operates 24/7 not just daylight hours so by the time you have a 15% efficient PV panel charging a battery bank with 25% efficiency your overall efficiency could be as low as 4% electrical
Posted By: evanPosted By: renewablejohnPosted By: evan
But "PV was a non starter due to inefficiency of charging batteries. " - Huh?
We wanted a system that operates 24/7 not just daylight hours so by the time you have a 15% efficient PV panel charging a battery bank with 25% efficiency your overall efficiency could be as low as 4% electrical
Woah there, this is getting very hand-wavey. Battery banks and inverters can be far more efficient than that for round trip storage, better than 90% even if you use the best available. You also seem to be ignoring grid connection.
I think you'll be hard pressed to get anywhere near that with heat storage and steam engines.
By all means publish and prove me wrong, but please don't (erroneously) put down other technologies just to make your approach sound better.
Posted By: fostertomIf in winter periods you're relying on biomass, then which time of year is your 'waste' heat useful?
Posted By: renewablejohnOur philosophy has been to design the system to the maximum temperature which is achievable and with thermal oil and evacuated tubes that would be approx 230C. We then exploit the temperature gradient between 230C and 100C to produce electrical energy then any waste heat below 100C can be used for domestic hot water and central heating.So I was asking about the waste heat that you get during periods when your hi-temp solar is the heat source.